Rick Murphy, Throwback Journalist And Columnist, Dies At Age 70 - 27 East

Rick Murphy, Throwback Journalist And Columnist, Dies At Age 70

icon 2 Photos
Rick Murphy

Rick Murphy

Rick Murphy

Rick Murphy Courtesy Bridget LeRoy

author on Jul 24, 2020

I can’t recall a day in the past few years when Rick Murphy arrived at work without a smile on his face.

He was, quite simply, one of the most affable fellows I’ve ever met.

On Tuesday, July 21, at around 6:30 p.m., Mr. Murphy, the former editor of the Independent newspaper based in East Hampton, died at Stony Brook Southampton Hospital. He had been hospitalized on Friday and suffered a heart attack on Saturday morning, from which he never regained consciousness.

His beloved wife, the Independent’s cartoonist and fellow reporter Karen Fredericks, was holding his hand as he died. Mr. Murphy had turned 70 on May 11.

Rick Murphy was a six-time winner of the New York Press Association Best Column award, as well as the winner of first-place awards from the National Newspaper Association and the Suburban Newspaper Association of America, and a two-time Pulitzer Prize nominee.

“I’ve been a newspaper junkie all my life, as was my dad,” Mr. Murphy reminisced in his weekly column. “I had a dual passion, sports and humor. The great New York newspaper columnists are the stuff of legends. Red Smith of The Times, perhaps the greatest, won a Pulitzer. He was at his best writing about horse racing. Hell, it’s probably his fault I got hooked on the ponies.”

It’s hard to remember a time when Mr. Murphy was not employed at one paper or another on the East End.

David Rattray, editor of The East Hampton Star, recalled on Wednesday, July 22, that Mr. Murphy’s first job, a half century ago, was as cartoonist for the now-defunct Sag Harbor Herald.

Jerry Della Femina, former owner of the Independent, said he hired Mr. Murphy as editor because “I didn’t know the first thing about the newspaper business. I hired Rick because I needed a real newsman to show me the way.” He added, “He did his job and he did it well.”

Mr. Della Femina saw in him “the spirit of all the great newsmen: the Jimmy Breslins, the Pete Hamills.” Mr. Murphy, he said, “liked to drink, he was tough as nails, and wrote a great column that was edgy and dangerous. He was fun, he was loose. He didn’t suffer fools. He was fearless.”

Aside from, as he liked to put it, “stirring shit up,” Mr. Murphy used his column to recount in colorful detail his childhood growing up in Brooklyn, son of Stanley Murphy and Eleanor Forcucci, and his summers spent at the family’s home on Howard Street in Sag Harbor.

“Ricky Murphy possessed a biting wit and the soul of a storyteller that made him the East End’s own version of Mark Twain,” Assemblyman Fred Thiele said on Wednesday, July 22. “I met him more than 50 years ago. He was a ‘summer kid’ in Sag Harbor. We shared a love of sports and of Sag Harbor. Murph made everyone laugh even then — although you were always hoping you wouldn’t be on the wrong end of his satire.”

“I’m also not one of the locals who rejoice because all the obnoxious city people leave town. There are plenty of obnoxious local people here, too, myself included,” Mr. Murphy once acknowledged in print.

“He was a gifted journalist,” Mr. Thiele continued. “I especially looked forward to his columns, again hoping not to be on the wrong end of his pen. We talked frequently about the state of the world and our place in it. I’ll miss those telephone calls from an old friend and his unique take on life.”

With his staying power in the world of East End journalism, he mentored many of the successful editors and reporters on the East End, including Lisa Finn of Patch. “Rick Murphy taught me everything about digging deep to get to the bottom of a scandal,” said Ms. Finn. “He’d do his homework. He taught me to cover local politics like nobody’s business.”

She continued, “Rick was a mentor, a true teacher who was never afraid to let another writer shine — he applauded the efforts and successes of other journalists. Beyond the work, Rick was a friend. We both came from Brooklyn, and the stories we shared were rich with laughter and memories.

“He was a renegade, the best investigative journalist I’ve ever known, tough as nails when it meant digging for the truth — and he was brilliant. But he also had the hugest heart and was loyal beyond words to his friends, to his beloved dogs, to his wife, Karen, the love of his life and true center of his world.”

She added, “If anyone knew how to really live every day with full-on enthusiasm and unfettered joy, Rick did. If you were lucky enough to share a newsroom with Rick Murphy, your life was never boring and forever changed. Days in the office were filled not just with deadlines and hard-hitting journalism but with music, stories, laughter, and flat-out fun. Anyone who was lucky enough to be his friend and colleague will miss him forever.”

Rick Murphy — whose full name was Henry Francis Murphy — graduated from Long Island University before settling for good on the South Fork.

Mr. Murphy and Ms. Fredericks married on May 4, 1996, and resided on Barnes Avenue in East Hampton, with their rescue dog, CocoBelle, another frequent subject of Mr. Murphy’s column — which was known to sometimes be controversial, right from the get-go.

“I was writing for The Sag Harbor Herald,” Mr. Murphy recalled in his column. “At the time, Paul Sidney, the voice of WLNG radio, was in all his glory. I nonchalantly interjected in my column that it was his jawbone framing the entrance to the [Sag Harbor Whaling] Museum.

“Letters came pouring in. The phones rang off the hook. How dare I insult this man who did so much for so many? I figured my first column would be my last, until Paul himself stopped by the Herald office. ‘Kid,’ he said reassuringly, ‘always make sure you spell my name right.’”

“I’ve been around the block,” he wrote in another column. “‘Low Tidings,’ ‘Rick’s Place,’ ‘Rick’s Space.’ I did a long stint at The East Hampton Star under the ‘Relay’ heading, pretty much monopolizing it when I worked there. I’ve never written about the soup of the day. Jerry Della Femina and I wrote columns for 16 straight years, and we never once wrote about the same topic. … Out here on the edge, there’s no room for pussies.”

“There were, until today, two distinctive, signature gravelly voices in the world,” said writer Joan Baum. “One is Dr. Fauci’s. The other was Rick Murphy’s.”

“He knew where all the bodies were buried,” said Bonnie Brady, executive director of the Long Island Commercial Fishing Association in Montauk. “It was amazing. Talking to him was like getting a lesson in the last 30 years of East End politics.”

The funny and poignant parts of his marriage to Ms. Fredericks were another writing adventure for Mr. Murphy. “Karen and I are basically children, our maturity level stuck around 8. She draws cartoons. I read comic books and play with baseball cards,” he wrote.

“Karen is into yard sales. Me? Not so much. This is probably because I know very little about antiques. Before I met Karen my idea of an early American piece was a clapboard cupboard I bought at W.T. Grant before it became Caldor.”

A self-described child of the 1960s, Mr. Murphy loved to discuss the music, people, and mores of the period. “Rick would tell me things about baseball and The Grateful Dead that I didn’t know, saying it in a way that no one else could,” said Chris Hall of CP Complete, a longtime friend. “I can’t recall a conversation that didn’t end in laughter. I’m sure he’s laughing in heaven, listening to Jerry sing ‘Friend of the Devil,’ and — not so tactfully — mentioning to God that it’s ironic, given the venue.”

Mr. Della Femina summed it up: “Rick’s writing and direction made The Independent a small-town newspaper with big-town talents. The newspaper business and I will miss him.”

Those who wish to can honor Mr. Murphy’s memory with donations to the Animal Rescue Fund of the Hamptons — Mr. Murphy once shaved his head to raise $5,000 to benefit rescue animals.

In addition to his wife, he is survived by sister Phyllis Howell and brother-in-law Robert Howell. He was predeceased by his brother, Stanley Murphy Jr., and his daughter, Anna Rose Murphy.

A celebration of his life will be held in the fall.

You May Also Like:

Two Flee After Hampton Bays Crash, Evade Police Search

Two occupants of a car that fled from police then crashed into another vehicle near Slo Jack’s in Hampton Bays evaded an extensive police search and are still at large. Southampton Town Police say that one of their officers had witnessed a 2022 Honda Accord traveling at a high rate of speed in Hampton Bays on Friday afternoon and attempted to pull the vehicle over, but the driver refused to pull over and sped up. For safety reasons, the officer broke off his pursuit, as is standard police practice in instances where no immediate threat to the public is suspected. ... 3 May 2024 by Staff Writer

‘Technical Difficulties’ Close Drawbridge on Jessup Lane in Westhampton Beach

Due to unspecified “technical difficulties,” the Jessup Lane Bridge, a drawbridge in Westhampton Beach, may ... 2 May 2024 by Staff Writer

Dead Minke Whale Found in Bridgehampton

A badly decomposed female minke whale was found in the ocean surf in Bridgehampton early ... by Staff Writer

A Man on a Mission to Bring Medical Care to Ukraine | 27Speaks Podcast

 John Reilly, a physician assistant from Shelter Island, spent the first half of March ... by 27Speaks

The Bus Test

Social media was abuzz last week with a report: An unmarked bus was dropping off adult men in the parking lot of the Macy’s shopping plaza in Hampton Bays. Speculation was rampant, and it largely followed a national narrative about an “invasion” of immigrants ending up in American communities. In fact, there’s little information on what the bus (or buses — there likely were others) was doing. It might have been seasonal workers arriving for the season, but it could have been something innocuous, like a private bus trip returning home. Police were called, but as one town official pointed ... 1 May 2024 by Editorial Board

Terrible Optics

Westhampton Beach Village officials and Police Chief Steven McManus need a lesson in optics. The revelation last week that a body camera video recorded during the investigation of an off-duty Village Police officer who rolled his truck during a single-car accident in November 2021 was not released to the public for close to a year, despite numerous requests from The Press that went unanswered for seven months, sends the wrong signal about the village’s commitment to keeping the public informed. It was only after a request from an attorney on behalf of The Press that a copy of the video ... by Editorial Board

A Costly Hire

Permitting public employees to collect a six-figure pension while simultaneously collecting a six-figure salary is one of the reasons why New York is such a high-tax state. Though the Village of Southampton took it a step further: It wasn’t enough for the new village administrator to receive a $165,000 salary on top of a $120,000 New York Police Department pension — the Village Board just gave Administrator Anthony Carter a $50,000 pay bump, retroactive to when he started in November, in lieu of receiving village health insurance and other benefits. When a retiree already receiving taxpayer-funded health care goes back ... by Staff Writer

Rally for Increased Train Service Coming to Hampton Bays LIRR Station

Elected officials on the South Fork, Long Island Rail Road passengers, and leaders in education, ... by Christopher Walsh

Southampton Boys, Girls Relay Teams Are Picking Up Steam

Southampton could have its relay teams back. Historically, both the boys and girls track programs ... by Drew Budd

Search for Body Parts in Gilgo Beach Investigation Expanded to North Sea

The search for body parts related to an investigation into homicides allegedly committed by a ... by Christopher Walsh